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Summer 2006 Courses and Faculty


Summer Courses

MI 40004/60004. Medieval Latin
Frank A.C. Mantello
3 credits; 10:30-12:25 MWF
6/20/06-8/3/06

This course is an introduction to the Latin language and literature of the late antique and medieval periods (ca.A.D. 200-1500). Designed to move students toward independent work with Medieval Latin texts, the course will emphasize the close reading and careful translation of a variety of representative Medieval Latin texts and documents, with attention to vocabulary and word formation, orthography and pronunciation, morphology and syntax, and prose styles and metrics. The course will also provide an introduction to some of the areas of Medieval Latin scholarship, including lexica, bibliographies, great collections and repertories of sources, and reference works for the study of Latin works composed in the Middle Ages. ($45 materials fee.)

The Medieval Academy of America's Committee on Centers and Regional Associations (CARA) offers two full-tuition scholarships for students taking a three-credit summer program Latin course through the Medieval Institute at Notre Dame. Application details and eligibility information is available at: http://www.nd.edu/~medinst/programs/summer.html.

Prerequisite: Both elementary and intermediate Classical Latin or the equivalent, taken recently for college credit. Students are strongly encouraged to register concurrently for the one-credit course Intensive Latin Review, MI 40020/60020, taught from June 20 to June 30.

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MI 40020/60020. Intensive Latin Review
Frank A.C. Mantello
1 credit; T R 10:20-12:05 & 2:40-4:25
6/20/06-6/30/06

This course is an intensive, two-week review of the principal constructions of Classical Latin syntax, designed for those who have completed both elementary and intermediate Classical Latin or the equivalent and wish to study Medieval Latin.

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MI 47801/67801. Research in Biocultural Anthropology
Susan G. Sheridan
6 credits 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. MTWRF
6/5/06-7/14/06

This hands-on research course will engage students in an experiential learning environment that immerses them in anthropological method and theory. Using the large Byzantine St. Stephen's skeletal collection from Jerusalem as the cornerstone, historical and archaeological information will be synthesized in a bio-cultural reconstruction of ancient monastic life. Students will conduct original research, share in an active field trip program, and participate in a lecture program delivered by top scholars in the fields of biological anthropology, classics, and Near Eastern studies. Students will develop a suite of methodological skills in the natural and social sciences, explore artifacts and life ways of the study population, delve into the pertinent literature using several world-class libraries, develop skills for collaborative research, and discover the importance of a holistic approach to a fuller understanding of life in the past. Visit the project web site at: http://www.nd.edu/~stephens.

Enrollment limit 10. Permission of instructorand application required; contact Susan Guise Sheridan (Susan.G.Sheridan.5@nd.edu), 574-631-7670.

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MI 60005. Paleography
Frank A.C. Mantello
3 credits; MWF 2:30-4:25
6/20/06-8/4/06

This course is an introduction to the study of medieval writing materials and practices and of Latin scripts from antiquity to the early Renaissance. Designed to provide students with the skills necessary to make use of Latin manuscripts in their research, the course will focus on practical exercises in identifying, transcribing, dating, and localizing the various scripts. It will be of interest (1) to a wide variety of students whose courses are centered in or touch upon the Middle Ages and who wish to work with unpublished Latin materials of the medieval period; (2) to professional Latinists and other humanists who study the classical tradition and the transmission of texts before the age of printing; and (3) to librarians and others with an interest in manuscripts, diplomata, incunabula, and rare books. ($45 materials fee.)

The Medieval Academy of America's Committee on Centers and Regional Associations (CARA) offers two full-tuition scholarships for students taking a three-credit summer program Latin course through the Medieval Institute at Notre Dame. Application details and eligibility information is available at: http://www.nd.edu/~medinst/programs/summer.html

Prerequisite: Both elementary and intermediate Classical Latin or the equivalent, taken recently for college credit, or MI 40004/60004 (=MI 470/570) or the equivalent.

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MI 60660. Introduction to Modern Standard Arabic
Abdul Massih Saadi
3 credits 8:00-10:20 MTWRF
6/20/06-8/4/06

An introduction to modern standard Arabic, this eight-week intensive course deals with all the fundamentals of Arabic reading and speaking. No previous knowledge of Arabic is necessary. This course is equal to two semesters of MEAR 10101 and 10102.
The texts will be: Alif Baa, Introduction to Arabic Letters and Sounds and Al-Kitaab, Part One.

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Summer Session Faculty

Frank A. C. Mantello
Professor Mantello has a doctorate from the University of Toronto's Centre for Medieval Studies. Since 1979 he has taught Medieval Latin, Latin Paleography, Codicology and Textual Criticism at the Catholic University of America, where he is a professor in the Department of Greek and Latin and chair of the department.

Abdul Massih Saadi
In addition to ongoing research and cataloguing of Syriac and Arabic early and medieval manuscripts, Professor Saadi teaches Arabic and Syriac languages and their literatures. He has edited and translated the encyclopedic work of Moshe Bar Kepha (9th century), a Syrian bishop and scholar. He has taught various courses on Eastern (Syriac) Christianity and Islam and is visiting professor of classics at Notre Dame.

Susan Guise Sheridan
Professor Sheridan is the coordinator of the Byzantine St. Stephen's Project, a biocultural study of life in a large urban monastery in Jerusalem. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Colorado and is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Notre Dame.

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Other Courses of Interest to Medievalists

HIST 30293. Crusade and Jihad:  Medieval Holy Wars
Sarah Davis-Secord
3 credits 8:25-10:20
MWF 6/20/06-8/3/06

This course will provide a history of the crusading movement of Western Europe (c.1095-1291 A.D.) and its impact on the civilizations of the medieval West and Near East. Course material will address the history not only of the events of the Crusades, but of the peoples and ideas involved in them as well as their long-term legacies.  What were the motivations of the Christian crusaders?  How did the Muslims and Jews of the Near East view the Crusades, and how did they respond to them?  In what ways did the prolonged contact between these two major civilizations affect the societies, religions, and economies of each?  Note:  This course fulfills the University history requirement.

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THEO 60241. Carmelite Contemplative Tradition
Keith Egan
3 credits 2:00-4:20 MTWRF
7/10/06-7/28/06

Many believe that Christianity will be more authentic when it lives and serves out of its contemplative traditions. This course explores the contemplative and mystical wisdom of the Carmelite Tradition. Carmelite classics and authors like the following will be explored for what they have to offer this search for a more contemplative Christianity: The Carmelite Rule, The Institution of of the First Monks, Teresa of Avila, John of the Cross, Therese of Lisieux, Elizabeth of the Trinity and Edith Stein. Topics like contemplative prayer, contemplation, dark night, bridal mysticism, transformation in God through love, mysticism and the sacramental life, everyday mysticism, and the Trinitarian character of mysticism will be explored.

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THEO 63204. The Intensive Course: The Theology of Thomas Aquinas 
Thomas O’Meara and Joseph Wawrykow
4 credits 9:40-12:00 & 2:00-4:20 MTWRF
7/10/06-7/21/06

Much of Catholic thought and life from the end of the Middle Ages through Vatican II has drawn deeply on the theology of Thomas Aquinas; recent years have witnessed an heightened interest in his teaching. Led by experts in his life, work and influence, this intensive course (4 credits) offers over a two-week period an advanced introduction to the theology of Thomas Aquinas, with two-hour sessions in the morning and in the afternoon.

The morning session, taught by Thomas O'Meara, O.P. (Ph.D. Ludwig-Maxmillian University, Munich), introduces students to the medieval world, and to the patterns and themes of the Summa theologiae. Among O'Meara's numerous books and articles is the acclaimed Thomas Aquinas Theologian (1997).

The afternoon session, led by Joseph Wawrykow (Ph. D. Yale University) focuses on Aquinas's Christology, in the Summa and in other representative works. Wawrykow is the author of the recent The Westminster Handbook to Thomas Aquinas (2005) and co-editor of Christ Among the Medieval Dominicans (1998) and The Theology of Thomas Aquinas (2005).


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